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Rush to Disaster : The Loss of USS Thresher - Capt. James B. Bryant

Rush to Disaster

The Loss of USS Thresher

By: Capt. James B. Bryant

Hardcover | 8 December 2026

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Rush to Disaster reexamines the 1963 loss of USS Thresher-the deadliest nuclear submarine disaster in history-using thousands of pages of newly declassified Naval Court of Inquiry (NCOI) records released through a landmark Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit. Written by a former nuclear commander, the book reveals how Cold War urgency, flawed assumptions, and institutional pressure combined to produce a catastrophe that reshaped submarine safety.

On April 10, 1963, USS Thresher (SSN 593) sank during a deep-dive test following an extensive maintenance period. It remains the worst nuclear submarine disaster in the world, taking with it 129 sailors and civilians. Within hours, the U.S. Navy convened a Naval Court of Inquiry (NCOI) to determine what happened and what could be learned from this tragedy. For decades, the proceedings of that court-more than 1,700 pages of testimony and thousands of pages of supporting material-remained largely inaccessible to the public.

Rush to Disaster draws on more than 6,000 pages of newly declassified records, released because of a 2019 Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by author James B. Bryant Combining operational insight with documentary evidence previously unavailable to anyone, Bryant traces the submarine's short life-from design and construction through commissioning, shakedown, and post-shakedown availability-before turning to the events of its final dive. Particular attention is given to how legacy design assumptions, aggressive schedules, and incomplete training frameworks intersected with the unprecedented demands of operating at far greater depths than previous submarine classes had.

Central to the analysis is the NCOI itself: its findings, limitations, and the context in which it worked. The book examines testimony from officers, engineers, shipyard personnel, and analysts, including previously classified acoustic analysis from the Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS). It also explores what the court could not fully address at the time, given incomplete wreckage data and pressure to reach conclusions quickly while sister ships approached sea trials.

Rather than presenting a single point of failure, Bryant documents a chain of technical, organizational, and cultural factors that accumulated over time. In doing so, he offers a detailed case study of how complex naval systems are designed, tested, and operated-and how risks can emerge when innovation outpaces established practices.


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